Test jack testing of toll ticketing trunk circuit



Dec. 1958 Filed Aug. 3, 1956 TEST JACK FIG.

6 Sheets-Sheet 1 FIG. FIG. FIG.

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" TI 5 I? PRIVATE PARTY PARTY PARTY LINE AND ONE TWO TEN TERM|NAL MATRIX MATRIX MAT IX PER MATRIX 6 l O) 620 630 640 e90 IDENTIFICATION MATRIX CIRCUIT-68.0 IDENTIFIER CIRCUIT United States Patent TEST JACK TESTTWG OF TOLL TICKETING TRUNK CIRCUIT Richard Boyd, Rochester, N. Y., assignor to General Dynamics Corporation, Rochester, N. Y., a corporatron of Delaware Application August 3, 1956, Serial No. 601,869

Claims. (Cl. 179-9) This invention relates to an automatic toll ticketing system for storing data pertaining to toll calls and, more particularly, to such a system including means for storing data pertaining to test calls.

In prior toll ticketing systems, such as the one shown and described in the copending application of M. A. Clement and B. A. Harris, Serial No. 536,579, filed September 26, 1955, which application is assigned to the same assignee as the present application, data pertaining to tell calls is automatically stored in a storage device individual to a trunk circuit forming a part of connection extended from a calling line under the control of subscriber dialed signals. Included in this data is the designation of the calling line which is provided by automatic calling line identifying means selectively operated by an identification potential returned over the extended connection from the trunk circuit to the identifying means. These identifying means also include means for preventing the storage 'of data in the storage device when the calling line identifying means fails to provide satisfactory calling line or subscriber identifying data.

It is often desirable to check the operation of the trunk circuit to store the necessary toll call data in the storage device by pulsing or dialing test data simulating that provided in a conventional toll call directly into the trunk circuit, thereby to store test call data in the storage device. This direct test operation of the trunk circuit should not occur during the storage of data pertaining to a toll call because of the mutilation of this latter data. Further, in systems of the type shown in the above identified application, the trunk circuit is prevented from storing all of the data pertaining to a call if a satisfactory calling line identifying operation is not performed. This operation, as described above, requires the return of a potential over a switch train extended to the trunk circuit which is not provided in test operations, and, accordingly, trunk circuits of the type shown in the above identified copending application are incapable of providing as full a test operation as is desirable in that the test data storing operation is arrested by the failure of the calling line identifying facilities to provide a subscriber identification.

Accordingly, one object of the present invention is to provide an automatic toll ticketing system including means for storing data pertaining to a test call in a storage device.

Another object is to provide test means in a toll ticketing system for storing data pertaining to a call in a storage device, said test means including means for supplying data relating to an arbitrary calling line or subscriber designation.

Another object is to provide a trunk circuit operable in accordance with subscriber dialed information to store data pertaining to a toll call in a storage device and operable in accordance with directly received information to store data pertaining to a test call.

A further object is to provide a trunk circuit having trunk busying means and test means including said busying means for storing data pertaining to a test call.

Other objects and advantages of the present invention will become apparent from the ensuing description of an illustrative embodiment thereof in the course of which reference is had to the accompanying drawings in which:

Fig. l is a block diagram illustrating conventional automatic telephone switching equipment in a local office from which toll calls to be ticketed are extended;

Figs. 2 to 5, inclusive, form a schematic drawing illustrating the details of a trunk circuit embodying the present invention;

Fig. 6 is a schematic diagram partially in block form illustrating a party matrix switching circuit in conjunction with other calling subscriber identifying equipment; and

Fig. 7 is a block diagram disclosing the manner in which Figs. 2 to 6, inclusive, are positioned adjacent each other to form a complete circuit diagram of a system embodying the present invention.

In general, the trunk circuit of the present invention is adapted to be utilized in an automatic toll ticketing system of the type disclosed in the above identified copending Clement et al. application. As shown therein, the items of information pertaining to a toll call are collected in a trunk recorder or storage device individual to an outgoing toll trunk under the control of pulses dialed at a calling substation, the trunk recorders being capable of storing the items of information pertaining to a plurality of toll calls. At a selected time of day, such .as the early hours of the morning in which the trafiic level on the system is relatively low, the trunk circuit is seized by recording and playback facilities to permit the items of information pertaining to a plurality of calls to be sequentially played back from the trunk recorder to control recording facilities for producing a group of permanent records each including the items of information pertaining to a single toll call.

More specifically and referring to Figs. 1 to 6, inclusive, of the drawings, assuming that a toll call which is to be automatically ticketed is to be extended from a calling substation A to a called substation B located in a remote area, the subscriber at'the substation A goes oif-hook to extend a circuit to a line circuit individual thereto, the line circuit 100 placing an allotter 101 in operation so that a link comprising a finder 102 and a selector 104 is placed in operation to search for and seize the calling line circuit 100. In response to the completion of the association between the finder-selector link including the units 102 and 104 with the line circuit 100, the calling subscriber is advised that dialing may be initiated to extend the connection to the called subscriber B. The first digit dialed at the calling substation A is an access digit which must be dialed in order to extend the connection to the group of trunks equipped with automatic toll ticketing means which are utilized to extend the connection to the remote area. Assuming that the access digit is 8, in response to the dialing of the access digit 8, the selector 104 advances its wipers to the eighth level and thereafter automatically searches over the multiples in the eighth level to seize an idle outgoing trunk extending to the desired remote area. Assuming that the trunk circuit shown in Figs. 2 to 5, inclusive, is the first idle trunk circuit in the eighth level of the selector 104, the calling loop circuit is extended to this trunk circuit, thereby to prepare the trunk circuit for controlling the extension of the connection to the called substation B and for recording the items of information pertaining to the toll call in a trunk recorder 500 which is individual to this trunk circuit.

The first item of information dialed at the calling substation A following the seizure of an idle trunk circuit is a dialed party digit which has an arbitrary value if the calling substation A is on a private line, which has a value representing the units digit of the directory number of the calling substation if the substation A is on a terminal per line multiparty line, and which has a value corresponding to the position of the calling substation A on a multiparty line if the multiparty service on the line is provided on a terminal per station basis. This dialed party digit is not repeated to remote switching squipment 300 but rather is simultaneously recorded in the trunk recorder or storage device 500 and utilized to control the setting of a stepping switch in the trunk circuit. The final setting of the stepping switch operates a selected number of party digit register relays to prepare a single marking path on one of five conductors representing parties 1 or 6, 2 or 7, 3 or 8, 4 or 9, and 5 or and to prepare a single marking path on a pair of conductors representing parties one to five or parties six to ten. These conductors extend to a party matrix switching circuit 600 and control this oncuit at a later point in the data recording process to select a proper control component or party matrix for automatically determining the directory number of a calling substation on a terminal per station multiparty line. Following the completion of the dialing of the dialed party digit by the calling subscriber at the substation A, the stepping switch in the trunk circuit is returned to a normal condition and the trunk circuit is rendered capable of transmitting subsequently dialed digits to control the operation of the remote switching equipment 300 to extend the connection to the called subscriber B.

The next item of information dialed by the subscriber at the station A is the group of digits forming the directory number of the called substation B, and, assuming that a conventional 2-5 numbering scheme is utilized, the subscriber at the station A dials seven digits, all of which are simultaneously recorded in the trunk recorder 560 and repeated over the outgoing trunk to the remote switching equipment 300, thereby to extend the connection to the called substation B. Simultaneously with thus utilizing the dialed digits representing the directory number of the called substation B, the trunk circuit advances the stepping switch therein in the interdigit interval so as to count the dialed switch operating digits so as to render the trunk circuit incapable of repeating additional digits over the outgoing trunk after a predetermined number of digits, i. e. seven, have been dialed.

In response to the receipt of answering supervisory signals from the remote switching equipment 300, a motor driven timing mechanism which is adapted to provide a control impulse at a selected time interval, such as one to two seconds, following the receipt of answering supervision and other pulses at one minute intervals representing elapsed time for the call is rendered effective so that, if the connection is not released within the first short time interval of from one to two seconds, the trunk circuit is advised that the call is to be ticketed and initiates the recording of date and time information in the trunk recorder 500. More specifically, the general system includes a clock-calendar circuit 220 of the type disclosed in the above identified Clement et al. application which, upon actuation, provides a series of pulses representing the date and time on which the call being ticketed was placed, these pulses being recorded in the trunk recorder 500.

In response to the completion of the storage of the clock-calendar information in the trunk recorder 500, the trunk circuit applies ground to an identifier sender allotter (not shown) to initiate the automatic determination of the directory number of the calling substation A and the storage of this information in the trunk recorder 500. More specifically, the identifier sender allottcr, which may be of the type disclosed in the above identified copending Clement et al. application, allots an idle one of a plurality of identifier senders, similar to an identifier sender 310, to the calling trunk circuit. The identifier sender 310 may be of the type disclosed in the above identified copending Clement et al. application or may be of the type disclosed in the copending application of Ben A. Harris, Serial No. 518,952, filed April 18, 1956, which application is assigned to the same assignee as the present application. In response to the completion of the association of the identifier sender 310 with the trunk circuit, a power supply circuit 210, which is also of the type disclosed in the above identified copending Clement et al. application, is rendered effective to supply an identifier tion potential over the HS lead of the extended switch train to selectively energize an identification conductor which is individual to the calling line circuit and which terminates in a terminal 111. The terminal 111 is selectively connected to an identification matrix circuit 680, which is also of the type disclosed in the above identified copending Clement et al. application, in accordance with the type of service provided to the calling substation A. In the event that the substation A is on a private line, the terminal 111 is selectively interconnected with a private line and terminal per line matrix 640 in accordance with the digits forming the directory number of the calling substation A. Also, if the calling substation A is located on a terminal per line multiparty line, the terminal 111 is connected to the matrix 640 so as to provide marking conditions representing the thousands, hundreds, and tens digits of the directory number of the substation A, the units digit being provided by the dialed party digit as described above. If the calling substation A is located on a terminal per station multiparty line, the terminal 111 is connected in multiple to all of a plurality of tea party matrices of which only a party one matrix 610, a party two matrix 620, and a party three matrix 630 are shown in the drawings so that as many as ten separate marking conditions are established in the identification matrix circuit 680 in accordance with the different groups of digits forming the directory numbers of all of the substations on the terminal per station multi party line on which the station A is located.

In the event that the terminal 111 is connected to the private line and terminal per line matrix 640, the energization thereof selectively operates an identifier circuit 690, which may be of the type disclosed in either of the above identified copending Clement et al. or Harris applications, to provide marking conditions extending to the identifier sender 310 associated with the trunk circuit representing the digits forming the directory number of the calling substation on either the private line or the terminal per line multiparty line. Alternatively, if the calling substation A is located on a terminal per station multiparty line, marking conditions representing different designations are established in any number of the individual party matrices 610, 620, and 630. To determine the proper one of these matrices to be interconnected with the input to the identifier circuit 690, the party matrix switching circuit 600 is utilized. As described above, one or more of the group of the party register relays is selectively operated under the control of the stepping switch in the trunk circuit in response to the dialing of the dialed party digit. In response to the receipt of information indicating that the identifier sender 310 has been associated with the trunk circuit, ground is applied to the paths prepared by the selective operation of the party register relays to selectively operate the party matrix switching circuit 600 so that only a single one of the ten party matrices including the matrices 610, 620, and 630 is cut through to the input of the identifier circuit, thereby to provide signals to the identifier sender 310 representing only a single one of the directory numbers in accordance with the position of the calling substation A on the terminal per station multiparty line.

In response to receiving calling subscriber designation digits from the identifier circuit 690, the identifier sender releases the identifier sender allottcr, the identifier circuit 690, the identification matrix circuit 680, and the party matrix switching circuit 606, and removes the identification potential from the HS lead of the extended switch train and the identification conductor 110, thereby to release the common equipment components for use in identifying a subscriber involved in a subsequently placed toll call. If satisfactory calling subscriber data is provided, the identifier sender 310 initiates the transmission of a series of pulses to the trunk recorder 500' in accordance with the digital information stored in the sender 310 representing the designation of the calling substation A. However, if a satisfactory calling subscriber identification is not provided, the identifier sender 310 prevents the continuation of the connection and arrests the recording of additional toll call data.

Following the completion of the transmission of the necessary information representing the directory number of the calling substation A, the identifier sender 310 is restored to its normal condition, and the timing device individual to the trunk circuit transmits duration impulses at one minute intervals which are stored in the storage device or trunk recorder 500, thereby to provide a record of the length of the toll call. When the connection is released, the storage of the duration impulses in the trunk recorder 500 is terminated, and the stepping switch, which has remained in a position representing the number of dialed switch extending digits, is restored to a normal positon. This stepping switch thereafter cooperates with a pulse generating source in the trunk circuit to sequentially advance an elongated medium forming the record medium in the trunk recorder 500 through a series of steps which are counted by the stepping switch to provide a measured run-off for spacing the previously recorded items pertaining to the toll call just completed from the items of information pertaining to the next toll call placed through the trunk circuit. Prior to spacing out the elongated medium, the trunk recorder records an end-ofcall code on the elongated record medium representing the end of the items of information pertaining to the toll call. Following the completion of the spacing operation under the control of the stepping switch, the stepping switch is restored to its normal condition together with the remainder of the components in the trunk circuit, thereby to permit the trunk circuit to be utilized in controlling items of information pertaining to a plurality of subsequently extended toll calls.

To initiate a routine playback operation in which the items of information stored in a plurality of trunk recorders similar to the trunk recorder 500 are transmitted to recording facilities 410, which may be of the type disclosed in the above identified copending Clement et al. application, a start ground is forwarded to the recording means 41% at a selected time of day, preferably during the early morning hours, so that the recording means 410 is placed in operation to seize a playback control circuit 4th which also may be of the general type disclosed in the above identified copending Clement et al. application. In response to seizure, the playback control circuit 400 places a switching means therein in operation to search for and sequentially seize the plurality of trunk circuits to which it has access. In seizing the first trunk circuit, this trunk circuit is operated to advance the magnetic tape in the recorder individual thereto to its effective beginning and thereafter movement of the magnetic tape under the control of the trunk circuit is terminated and transferred to the playback control circuit 409. The playback control circuit 400, working in conjunction with the recording facilities 41%, intermittently advances the magnetic tape so that the items of information stored therein are transmitted to the recording facilities 41% to control the production of records, each of which relates to one of the complete calls whose data is recorded in the seized trunk recorder.

Incident to seizing the first trunk circuit, an advance circuit is completed extending to control means in the 6 next trunk circuit to which the playback switching means has access, which control means, when operated, initiates the movement of the magnetic tape in the next succeeding trunk recorder to its effective beginning so that, when this next succeeding trunk circuit is seized, the delay inherent in advancing the magnetic tape to its effective beginning is obviated. The return of the magnetic tape to its home condition, however, places the trunk circuit in a busy condition, thus preventing its seizure for recording items of information pertaining to toll calls. In the prior trunk circuit disclosed in the above identified copending Clement et al. application, the control means for advancing the magnetic tape to its effective beginning in advance of the seizure of the trunk circuit with which each of the trunk recorders is associated with such that, under certain operating conditions such as a busy condition of a given one or more of the trunk circuits, the advance circuit for returning the magnetic tape to its effective beginning was effectively extended to the first idle trunk circuit. In this manner, it was possible for virtually all of the trunk circuits in a given trunk group to be placed in a busy condition either due to the recording of the items of information or due to the return of the magnetic tapes to their effective beginning. Thus, with all of the trunk circuits in a busy condition for one reason or another, the trafiic handling capabilities of the trunk group was materially reduced. Accordingly, in the trunk circuit of the present invention, the control means or advance circuit means for advancing the magnetic tapes in succeeding trunk circuits to their effective home positions is so arranged that, if any given trunk circuit is engaged in recording items of information pertaining to a toll call during the time in which a playback operation is being performed, the advance circuit for the next succeeding trunk circuit is interrupted to prevent placing an excessive number of trunk circuits in a busy condition. However, this series circuit arrangement is such that if the trunk circuit has been placed in a busy condition due to the manual operation of busying means or due to the establishment of an alarm condition in the trunk circuit, the series circuit relationship is maintained intact so that a trunk circuit which is busy for one of these reasons is effectively bypassed and the next succeeding idle trunk circuit is operated to return the magnetic tape in the trunk recorder individual thereto to its effective beginning.

Following the completion of the transmission of all of the items stored in any given one of the trunk recorders, the trunk circuit associated therewith first returns the magnetic tape to its effective beginning and thereafter renders the stepping switch and the pulse generating means therein effective to provide a measured run-off or a preselected distance between the effective beginning and the position on the elongated record medium at which the items of information pertaining to the first toll call are to be recorded. In response to the completion of the run-off operation, the trunk circuit is restored to a normal condition in which it is capable of being seized by line extending means and utilized in controlling the recording of items of information pertaining to toll calls. Following thecompletion of the playback of all of the trunk recorders associated with trunk circuits to which the playback control circuit has access, the playback control circuit 4% and the recording facilities 410 are restored to a normal condition.

It is often desirable, in providing proper maintenance for the toll ticketing facilities and including the trunk circuit, to dial the items of information pertaining to a test call directly into the trunk circuit, thereby to provide the trunk recorder 500 with the items of information pertaining to a test call, or to monitor the items of information being recorded in the trunk recorder 500 pertaining to a normal toll call. To permit the monitoring of items of information pertaining to a regularly established toll call, the trunk circuit is provided with test means permitting the connection of a monitoring or test device across the tip and ring conductors of the connection extended to the trunk circuit, thereby to audibly or visibly monitor the dialed information being supplied thereto. Alternatively, if it is desired to manually and directly insert information pertaining to a test call directly into the trunk circuit for recording by the trunk recorder 500, the test means are utilized in conjunction with a manually operated busy key, the conjoint operation of which permits a direct manually controlled recording of test call data in the trunk recorder 500.

In the prior trunk circuits of the type disclosed in the above identified copending Clement et a1. application, it is not possible to directly dial test call information into the trunk recorder 500 inasmuch as, as described above, the trunk circuit is forcibly returned to a released condition in the event that the identifier sender 310 is not provided with a satisfactory calling line identification, and, since the provision of this information is dependent upon returning an identification potential over an extended switch train to the identification matrix 680, the recording of test call data produced by dialing directly into the trunk circuit would be interrupted at the recording of the calling subscriber designation because of the lack of an extended switch train to the trunk circuit. However, in the trunk circuit of the present invention, the test means includes means for supplying an identification potential directly from the trunk circuit to a preassigned test number in the private line and terminal per line matrix 640 so that, in response to operation of the testing means following the operation of a manually controlled busy means which prevents seizure of the trunk circuit, an artificial calling line designation is automatically supplied to the trunk circuit and to the trunk recorder 500 to permit the recording of complete data pertaining to a test call.

To facilitate an easy understanding of the detached contact type of drawings utilized in the following description of an illustrative embodiment of the invention, a

combined numerical and alphabetical designation has been utilized to identify many of the relay structures and manually operated keys forming the schematic diagram of the trunk circuit. The windings of the relays are identified by one or more numerical digits indicating the figures of the drawings on which the relay winding is to be found followed by a group of alphabetical characters designating the relay. The contacts pairs of the various relays in the schematic circuit diagram are designated by a composite alphabetical and numerical designation in which one or more numerical characters identifying the figure of the drawings on which the contact pair is located is followed by a group of alphabetical characters indicating the relay of which the contacts form a part. One or more numerical characters are added to this designation to individually designate the different contacts of the same relay appearing in a single figure of the drawings.

As an example, a calling bridge relay having an operating winding located in Fig. 3 of the drawings is designatcd 3GB, and the contacts of this relay which are also located in Fig. 3 of the drawings are designated 3CB1 and 3CB2. Two other contact pairs forming a part of this relay appear in Fig. 2 of the drawings and, aecordingly, are designated 2CB1 and ZCBZ to indicate the first and second contact pairs of the CB relay that are located in Fig. 2.

In addition, certain of the keys forming a part of this schematic diagram, which may be either automatically or manually operated, are designated by one or more alphabetical characters identifying the key. The contacts on the key are designated by one or more numerical characters indicating the figure of the drawings on which the contacts are located followed by the alphabetical characters identifying the key and one or more numerical characters individually designating the different contact pairs of the key which appear in the same figure of the 8 drawings. For instance, an alarm key ALMK includes the pair of contacts 4ALMK1 located in Fig. 4 of the drawings.

The remaining components in the schematic diagram arc identified by solely numerical designations in which the digits other than the last two designate the figure of the drawings on which the element is located. For instance, the identifier sender 310 is located in Fig. 3 of the drawings, whereas the identifier circuit 690 is located in Fig. 6 of the drawings.

Trunk recorder 500 The trunk recorder 500 is of the type disclosed in the copending application of Howard S. Gleason, Serial No. 378,209, filed September 3, 1953, which application is assigned to the same assignee as the present application. In general, the recorder 500 comprises a base plate on which is detachably mounted a magazine containing an endless loop of magnetic tape which is stored in random layer fashion. A portion of the magnetic tape, which is disposed outside of the magazine, is moved relative to a pair of transducing heads by one of a pair of driving means. The transducing heads comprise a recordreproduce space pulse head 540 and a record-reproduce mark pulse head 520 having two magnetic gaps which are disposed adjacent contiguous transversely spaced portions of the magnetic tape to define two separate channels for receiving mark and space pulse information. Another transducing head comprises an erase head 55% having a single gap which is adapted to erase the entire width or both channels of the magnetic tape.

During recording operations, the magnetic tape is stationary, and the first advancing means comprises a step-by-step advancing mechanism including a pawl and ratchet drive arrangement driven by an advance magnet 530 for advancing the magnetic tape through a very small distance following the recording of each pulse. In order to provide high speed playback or readout operations, a-continuous drive mechanism is provided. This drive mechanism comprises a clutch magnet or solenoid 510 which moves a clutching idler into a position interposed between a driving roller and a pinch roller and capstan type of drive arrangement which directly drives the magnetic tape. In this manner, during playback operations, the magnetic tape in the trunk recorder 500 is rapidly advanced to produce mark and space impulses which are transmitted through the trunk circuit and the playback control circuit 400 to the recording facilities 410. A pair of contacts 511 in the energizing circuit for the magnet 530 are controlled by the clutch magnet 510 to prevent step-by-step operation of the magnetic tape during continuous drive operations.

In order to provide means for returning the magnetic tape in the trunk recorder 500 to its effective beginning or home position prior to recording and reproducing operations and in order to provide an alarm indication when the magnetic tape in the trunk recorder 500 is filled with items of information, a pair of tape controlled contacts 501 are provided which cooperate with three spaced perforations or conductive portions on the surface of the magnetic tape so as to define the effective beginning and end thereof. As disclosed in the above identified Gleason application, the tape contact structure may comprise portions carried on the surface of the tape which selectively bridge contact fingers held in engagement with one surface of the magnetic tape. Alternatively, the tape contact arrangement may comprise a grounded roller and a contact brush between which the magnetic tape is interposed so that the brush and roller arrangement sense spaced perforations in the magnetic tape.

Operation of the trunk circuit to record information in the trunk recorder 500 During recording operations, the trunk circuit, under the control of dial impulses supplied from the calling subscriber and answering supervisory signals received from the calling subscriber, selectively controls the recording of items of information pertaining to a toll call on the magnetic tape of the trunk recorder 500. At the termination of the recording operation, an endof-call code is recorded on the magnetic tape of the trunk recorder 500, and a stepping switch and a pulsing source cooperate to advance the magnetic tape a predetermined distance following the last of the recorded items of information pertaining to the preceding toll call.

Referring now more specifically to the drawings, as described above, in response to the dialing of an access digit, the calling loop circuit is extended from the calling substation A through the line circuit 100, the finder 102, and the selector 104 to the trunk circuit shown in Figs. 2 to 5, inclusive. This extension of the switch train to the trunk circuit completes the calling loop circuit through the input windings of a repeater coil 320 and the upper and lower windings of a calling bridge relay 3CB to ground through a pair of normally closed contacts 3TS1 and to grounded battery. The completion of this circuit operates the calling bridge relay 3CB to open a pair of contacts 3CB1 and to close a plurality of contacts 2CB2, 3CB1, and 30132. The closure of the contacts 3GB]. and 3CB2 and the opening of the contacts 2CB1 serve no useful function at this time. However, the closure of the contacts ZCBZ completes an obvious operating circuit for a release delay relay 2RD so that this relay operates to open a plurality of contacts 2RD1 and 4RD1 and to close a plurality of contacts ZRDZ, 2RD3, 3RD1, 3RD2, and 3RD3.

The closure of the contacts 3RD1 applies ground to the sleeve lead of the extended switch train, thereby to hold the switch train operated and to indicate that the trunk circuit is busy. The opening of the contacts 4RD1 further opens an interrupted path for initiating an emergency playback operation of the trunk circuit by the playback control circuit 400. The closure of the contacts 3RD2 interconnects a timer motor 360 to a terminal 361 which is provided with a suitable energizing voltage, thereby to condition the timing means individual to the trunk circuit for operation. The closure of the contacts 3RD3 completes a circuit including the contacts 3SHS3, 3NI2, 3CB1, or SPTll, 3SHS4, 3RD3, and 3PT2 or 3CB2 for placing the right hand operating winding of the differential supervisory relay 33R across the outgoing tip and ring conductors of the trunk circuit. Further, the closure of the contacts ZRDZ energizes the left hand winding of the relay 38R, but the supervisory relay 35R is not operated at this time. The closure of the contacts 2RD3 prepares an operating circuit for a mark pulse relay 3MK and a motor magnet SDC of a stepping switch DC, and the opening of the contacts ZRDl performs no useful function at this time.

The closure of the contacts ZRDZ also provides a source of main holding ground for the trunk circuit and completes an obvious operating circuit for a release delay slave relay ZRDS which operates to open a plurality of contacts ZRDSl, 3RDS1, 3RDS2, 3RDS3, and 4RDS2 and to close a plurality of contacts 2RDS2, 3RDS4, and 4RDS1. The closure of the contacts 4RDS1 grounds a conductor 493 to prevent seizure of the trunk circuit during a data recording operation, and the concurrent opening of the contacts 4RDS2 performs no useful function at this time. The opening of the contacts 3RDS2 further interrupts one open circuit for supplying ground to the trunk sleeve terminal or conductor, ground remaining thereon at the closed contacts 3RD1. The opening of the contacts 2RDS1 interrupts a point at an open operating circuit for a differential end-of-call relay ZEC, and the closure of the contacts 2RDS2 prepares an operating circuit for a space relay ZSP. The opening of the contacts 3RDSl opens a shunt including a resistor 351 and a condenser 352 which is across the repeater coil 320. The resistor 351 has a value approximating that of the proper termination resistance for the trunk circuit looking into the trunk circuit from the remote switching equipment 300. The opening of the contacts 3RDS3 interrupts an additional point in an open operating circuit for a reset magnet 3DCZ of the stepping switch DC.

The concurrent closure of the contacts 3RDS4 completes an obvious operating circuit for a slow-to-release third release delay relay 3RDT so that this relay operates to close a plurality of contacts 2RDT1, 2RDT3, 2RDT4, and 3RDT1 and to open a plurality of contacts ZRDTZ, 4RDT1, and 4RDT2. The closure of the contacts 2RDT1 prepares an operating circuit for the end-of-call relay ZEC, and the opening of the contacts ZRDTZ removes ground from a circuit extending through a plurality of closed contacts ZHMZ, 2081, and 2BY1 and a normally closed switch 235 to a terminal 236 which is connected to a common supervisory control. The removal of ground from this terminal indicates that the trunk circuit is in a busy condition. The normally closed switch 235 is opened by the removal of the trunk recorder 500 to provide an indication that the trunk circuit is busy. The closure of the contacts 2RDT3 prepares an operating circuit for the space relay ZSP, and the closure of the contacts 2RDT4 prepares another portion of the operating circuit for the mark relay 3MK and the motor magnet 3DC of the step-- ping switch DC. The closure of the contacts 3RDT1 provides an additional source of holding ground for the sleeve lead of the extended switch train, which ground is interrupted at the open contacts SRDSZ. The opening of the contacts 4RDT1 interrupts a point in an operating: circuit for a home relay 4HM, thereby to prevent the operation of this relay during a data recording operation. The opening of the contacts 4RDT2 performs no useful. function at this time.

The trunk circuit, in response to the seizure thereof; has operated the calling bridge relay 3CB and the releasedelay relays 2RD, ZRDS, and 3RDT to prepare pulsing paths for the space relay ZSP, the mark relay 3MK, and the motor magnet of the stepping switch 3DC to provide holding ground for the extended switch train and to provide busy ground to prevent additional attempted seizure of the trunk circuit by the circuit 400 or the telephone switching means. The trunk circuit is now conditioned to receive the first dialed information from the substation A which simultaneously operates the stepping switch DC and is recorded in the trunk recorder 500 but which is not repeated over the outgoing lines of the trunk circuit to the remote switching equipment 300.

The first item of information which is dialed by the calling subscriber at the station A following the seizure of the trunk circuit is a party digit which, as explained above, is of arbitrary value for calls placed from private lines, forms the units digit of the directory number for calling substations on terminal per line multiparty lines, and is utilized to selectively position the stepping switch DC to provide information for subsequently controlling the operation of the party matrix switching circuit 600 if the calling substation A is located on a terminal per station multiparty line. Accordingly, when the calling loop circuit extending to the trunk circuit is first interrupted incident to transmission of the first impulse of the dialed party digit, the calling bridge relay 3C3 releases to close the contacts 2CB1 and to open the contacts ZCBZ, 3CB1, and 3CB2. The operations of the contacts 3CB1 and 3CB2 produce no useful function inasmuch as these contacts are shunted by the closed contacts 3PT1 and 3PT2. The opening of the contacts ZCBZ interrupts the above described operating circuit for the release delay relay 2RD, but this relay is slow-to-release and does not release at this time.

The closure of the contacts ZCBI applies ground through a circuit including the closed contacts ZSRSZ, 2LD3, 2RD3, 2RDT4, 2IC5, 2PU4, and 3SD1 to be applied to the operating winding of the mark relay SMK, thereby operating this relay to close two pairs of contacts 4MK1 and SMKI. The closure of the contacts 4MK1 forwards ground over a circuit including the closed contacts 4MKS1, 4MK1, 4CS13 to be applied to the operating winding of the mark pulse head 520, the other side of which is connected to grounded battery through a pair of normally closed contacts 4CS11. The completion of this circuit energizes the mark pulse head 520 to record a mark or information pulse on the mark pulse channel of the magnetic tape in the trunk recorder 500 representing the first pulse of the dialed party digit. The closure of the contacts SMKI completes an obvious operating circuit for a second mark pulse relay SMKS which operates to open the contacts 4MKS1 and to close a pair of contacts 4MKS2. The opening of the contacts 4MKS1 interrupts the above described circuit for energizing the mark pulse head 520, thereby terminating the recording of the first mark pulse in the trunk recorder 500. The concurrent closure of the contacts 4MKS2 completes an operating circuit for the ratchet magnet 530 extending irom ground through the closed contacts 4MKS2, PA1, and 563, and the winding of the magnet 530 to grounded battery through a pair of contacts 511 controlled by the clutch magnet 510. The energization of the magnet 530 conditions the step-by-step driving mechanism in the trunk recorder 500 for advancing the magnetic tape a single step following the recording of the mark pulse thereon.

Referring to the above described circuit for operating the mark relay 3MK, the ground extended to the operating winding thereof in response to closing the contacts 2CB1 is also extended through a plurality of closed contacts 3EC2 and 3PT4 to energize the motor magnet 3DC of the stepping switch DC so that a plurality of Wipers ZDCI, 2DC2, 2DC3, and 2DC4 are advanced, the switch DC being of the direct acting type. In moving to the first stepping position in the bank of contacts adjacent thereto, the wiper 2DC1 prepares an operating path for a party one relay 2ON, which is one of a group of four party digit register relays including a group of other register relays 2T0, ZTR, and ZSTT. However, the operating circuit for the party one relay 2ON is not completed at this time inasmuch as ground is not supplied to any of the wipers ZDCI, 2DC2, or 2DC3. Thus the stepping switch DC is advanced a single step in synchronism with the recording of a single mark pulse on the magnetic tape in the trunk recorder 500 in response to the transmission of the first impulse of the dialed party digit,

The operation of the motor magnet 3DC also opens a pair of interrupter contacts ZDCS, but this produces no useful function at this time. In advancing, the wipers 2DC1-2DC-. close a plurality of oil normal contacts 3DC1 and 3DC2. The closure of the contacts 3DC1 prepares an operating circuit for the reset or release magnet 3DCZ, and the closure of the contacts 3DC2 prepares an additional circuit for applying ground to the sleeve terminal of the trunk circuit.

Referring back to the closure of the contacts SMKI in response to the operation of the mark relay SMK, the ground provided thereby is extended through a plurality of closed contacts SECI and 5LD1 to complete an obvious operating circuit for a slow-to-release shunt relay SSH which, in operating, opens a plurality of contacts ZSHI and 3SH2 and closes a plurality of contacts 3SH1, 3SH3, and 5Sl-l1. The closure of the contacts 3SH1 shunts the uppermost winding of the repeat coil 320, thereby reducing the resistance in the pulsing circuit for the calling bridge relay 3C8. The opening of the contacts SST-l2 interrupts an additional point in the circuit for applying ground to the wipers 2DC1, 2DC2, and 2DC3 of the stepping switch DC, and the concurrent closure of the contacts 3SH3 prepares an operating circuit for the motor magnet C of the switch DC. The opening of 12 the contacts 2SH1 interrupts a point in an operating circuit for the space relay 281.

The closure of the contacts 5SH1 completes an obvious operating circuit for a shunt slave relay SSHS which, in operating, closes a plurality of contacts ZSHSI, 2SHS2, 3SHS1, 351-152, and SSHSS and opens a plurality of contacts 3SHS3, 3SHS4, and 3SHS6. The closure of the contacts 2SHS1 prepares a circuit for applying ground to the wipers 2DC1, 2DC2, and 2DC3 of the stepping switch DC, which circuit is interrupted at the open contacts 351-12. The closure of the contacts 2SHS2 prepares a portion of an operating circuit for the space relay 251, which circuit is interrupted at the open contacts 2SH1. The closure of the contacts 3SHS1 applies a shunt around one of the operating windings of the supervisory relay 35R, and the opening of the conta ts 351-183 and 381-154 disconnects this winding of the supervisory relay from the pulsing paths extending to the conductors of the trunk circuit. The closure of the contacts 3SHS2 connects grounded battery to one of the leads of the trunk circuit through a circuit including the closed contacts 3NI2 and 3PT1, and the concurrent closure of the contacts 3SHS5 connects ground to the other of the conductors of the trunk circuit through a circuit including the closed contacts 3RD3 and 3PT2. The opening of the contacts SSHSG interrupts a point in an operating circuit for the release magnet 3DCZ.

At the end of the first open circuit interval representing the first pulse of the dialed party digit, the calling bridge relay 3CB again operates to close and open the contacts controlled thereby so that the contacts 3CB1 and 3CB2 connected in the signaling path of the trunk circuit are again closed, but the closure thereof has no effect due to the closed contacts 3PT1 and 3PT2. The closure of the contacts 2CB2 again completes the operating circuit for the slow-to-release release delay relay 2RD which is maintained operated during the release interval of the calling bridge relay 3GB. The opening of the contacts 2CB1, however, interrupts the above described operating circuit for both the motor magnet 3DC and the mark relay 3MK, thus permitting the magnet 3DC to release in preparation for the next operation thereof. The release of the mark relay 3MK opens the contacts 4MK1 and SMKI. The opening of the contacts 4MK1 interrupts, at an additional point, the previously interrupted circuit for energizing the mark pulse head 520, and the opening of the contacts SMKI interrupts the operating circuit for both the shunt relay SSH and the second mark pulse relay SMKS. The shunt relay SSH, however, is slow-torclease and does not release at this time.

However, the second mark pulse relay SMKS docs release to close the contacts 4MKS1 and to open the contacts 4MKS2. The closure of the contacts 4MKS1 prepares the above described pulsing path for the mark pulse head 520, and the concurrent opening of the contacts 4MKS2 interrupts the above described operating circuit for the drive magnet 530, thereby permitting this magnet to release and to advance the magnetic tape in the trunk recorder 500 a single step. Accordingly, at the end of the first pulse of the dialed party digit, the stepping switch DC has been advanced a single step, a single mark pulse has been recorded on the magnetic tape in the trunk recorder 500, and this magnetic tape has been advanced a single step, the first pulse transmitted to the trunk circuit further causing the operation of the shunt reluy SSH and the shunt slave relay SSHS.

During the receipt of subsequent impulses in the series of impulses representing the value of the dialed party digit, the trunk circuit operates, as described above, to record additional mark pulses on the mark pulse channel of the tape in the trunk recorder 500 and to advance this tape a single step at the termination of the recording of each of these pulses. Further, the stepping switch DC is advanced a single step in response to each impulse received by the trunk circuit from the extended switch train. Assuming that the calling substation A is located on a terminal per station multiparty line and is assigned the tenth position thereon, the assigned party digit is and, accordingly, a series of ten open circuit intervals in the calling loop circuit is provided so that the calling bridge relay 3CB operates and releases ten successive times during which ten mark pulses are recorded on the magnetic tape in the trunk recorder 501i, and this magnetic tape is advanced ten steps. Further, the wipers ZDCl, 2DC2, 2DC3, and 2DC4 of the stepping switch DC are advanced ten steps so that these wipers engage the last contacts in the contact banks associated therewith.

In the interdigit interval following the dialing of the dialed party digit, the trunk circuit conditions the signaling circuit therein for extending switch directing impulses over the output conductors of the trunk circuit to selectively operate the remote switching equipment 300 so as to establish a connection to the called substation B, produces the operation of one or more of the party digit register relays ZON, 2T0, ZTR, and ZSTT in accordance with the value of the dialed party digit, restores the stepping switch DC to its normal position, and records a control or space impulse'on the magnetic tape of the trunk recorder 500 immediately following the group of mark pulses representing the value of the dialed party digit, thereby to separate the record of the dialed party digit on the magnetic tape from the record pertaining to the next dialed digit. More specifically, in the interdigit interval following the dialing of the party digit, the slow-torelease shunt relay SSH releases to close the contacts ZSHT and 381-12 and to open the contacts 3SH1, 3SH3, and SSHl. The opening of the contacts 3SH3 again interrupts the partially prepared operating circuit for the motor magnet SDC of the stepping switch DC. The opening of the contacts SSI-Ilt interrupts the operating circuit for the shunt slave relay SST-IS, but this relay is rendered slow-to-release by a circuit including a resistor 521 and a condenser 522 in parallel with the operating winding of the relay SSHS, and, accordingly, the shunt slave relay SSHS does not release at this time. The opening of the contacts SSHll removes the shunt around the upper winding of the repeat coil 320, and the closure of the contacts ZSHl completes an operating circuit for the space relay 28? extending from closed and grounded contacts ZRDTS through the closed contacts 2SHS2, ZSHl, 2PU6, and 2SD2 to the operating winding of the relay ZSP.

The operation of the relay ZSP closes a plurality of contacts 3SP1 and 4SP1. The closure of the contacts 4SP1 completes a series circuit including the closed contants 4SPS1, 4SP1, 40817, the operating winding of the space pulse head 549, a pair of closed contacts 4CS15 and grounded battery. The completion of this circuit energizes the space pulse head 540 to record a space pulse on the space pulse channel of the magnetic tape in the trunk recorder 50% immediately following the last of the group of ten recorded pulses thereon representing the value of the dialed party digit. The closure of the contacts 3SP1 completes an obvious operating circuit for a second space relay 3SPS which, in operating, opens the contacts 4SPS1 and closes a pair of contacts 4-SPS2. The opening of the contacts iSPSl interrupts the above described energizing circuit for the space head 54d, thereby to terminate the recording of the space pulse, and the concurrent closure of the contacts 4SPS2 completes the energizing circuit described above for the drive magnet 53h, thereby to condition the magnetic tape for being advanced a single step.

Referring back to the preceding release of the shunt relay SSH, the closure of the contacts 3SH2 in response to release of this relay completes an obvious circuit for extending ground through a plurality of closed contacts 2PT4 and ZSHST to the wipers ZDCl, ZDCZ, and 2DC3 which, as described above, are in engagement with the tenth contacts in the contact banks associated therewith,

14 thus representing the value of the dialed party digit as being 10. The ground applied to the wipers 2DC1, 2DC2, and 2DC3 is simultaneously extended to the operating windings of the party two relay 2T0 through a normally closed pair of contacts ZTOZ, to the operating winding of the party three relay ZTR through a pair of normally closed contacts 2TR2, and to the operating winding of the parties sixten relay 2STT through a pair of normally closed contacts 2STT2, thereby causing the simultaneous operation of these three relays. The concurrent operation of these relays provides a manifestation or representation of the value of the dialed party digit 10.

The operation of the party two relay 2T0 closes a plurality of contacts 2TO1, 2TO4, 2TO6, 2TO7, and 3T0 and opens a plurality of contacts 2TO2, 2T 03, and 2TO5. The contacts 2TO1 and 2TO2 form a make-before-break contact arrangement so that the contacts 2TO1 complete a circuit extending to holding ground at the closed contacts ZRDZ through a pair of normally closed contacts 2IC1 prior to the opening of the contacts 2TO2 to interrupt the above described operating circpit for the relay 2T0. The selective operation of the contacts 2TO3 to 2TO6, inclusive, partially prepares a marking path to one of five conductors designated 1 or 6, 2 or 7, 3 or 8, 4 or 9, and 5 or 10 in Fig. 6 of the drawings, which conductors extend to the'party matrix switching circuit 600. The closure of the contacts 2TO7 prepares an operating circuit for a party transfer relay ZPT, and the closure of the contacts 3TO1 prepares an operating circuit for the release magnet SDCZ of the stepping switch DC.

The operation of the party three relay ZTR closes a plurality of contacts 2TR1, 2TR4, ZTRS, and STRIl, and opens a plurality of contacts 2TR2 and 2TR3. The contacts 2TR1 and ZTRZ form a make-before-break contact arrangement in which the closure of the contacts 2TR1 completes a holding circuit for the relay ZTR extending to ground through the closed contacts ZICl and ZRDZ prior to the opening of the contacts 2TR2 to interrupt the above described operating circuit for the relay ZTR. The opening of the contacts 2TR3 interrupts the partially prepared path extending to the conductor designated 2 or 7 by the closure of the contacts 2TO4, and the concurrent closure of the contacts 2TR4 prepares a marking path extending through the closed contacts 2TO6 to the conductor designated 5 or 10, thus indicating that the value of the stored party digit is either 5 or 10 in accordance with the operated or released condition of the parties six-ten relay ZSTT. The closure of the contacts ZTRS prepares a circuit in paralled with the closed contacts 2TO7 for operating the party transfer relay ZPT: The closure of the contacts 3TR1 provides a source of operating ground which is parallel to that provided by the closed contacts 3TO1 in the partially conditioned operating circuit for the release magnet 3DCZ.

The operation of the parties six-ten relay ZSTT closes a plurality of contacts ZSTTI and 2STT4 and opens a plurality of contacts ZSTTZ and ZSTTS. The contacts ZSTTI and ZSTTZ form a make-before-break contact arrangement so that the closure of the contacts ZSTTl completes a holding circuit extending to ground through the closed contacts 2101 and 2RD2 prior to the opening of the contacts 2STT2 to interrupt the above described operating circuit for the relay ZSTT. The opening of the contacts 2STT3 indicates that the value of the stored party digit is not in the range of the digits 1 to 5 by opening an operating path for a one-to-five relay 6OTF in the matrix switching circuit 600, and the concurrent closure of the contacts 2STT4 prepares a circuit for operating an above five relay 6AF, thereby to indicate that one of the two digits represented by the selection of the conductor designated as 5 or 10 is in the range above 5 or has the value of 10.

Although the operation of the party one relay ZON has not been described in detail, this relay is operated by the stepping switch DC when the value of the stored party digit is l, 4, 6, or "9 to actuate a plurality of contacts 2ON1, 2ON2, 2ON3, 2ON4, 2ON5, 2ON6, and 3ON1 to perform substantially the same functions as the operation of the relays 2T0 and ZTR. Accordingly, the selective operation of one or more of the group of party digit register relays ZON, 2T0, 2TR, and ZSTT establishes partially prepared circuits extending to the party matrix switching circuit 600 in accordance with the value of the stored party digit on one of five conductors, each of which represents a digit equal to or less than "5 and a digit greater in value than 5. The relay 2STT also prepares a circuit on one of two conductors extending to the switching circuit 600 in accordance with whether the registered digit has a value equal to or less than 5 or more than 5, thereby to prepare the switching circuit 600 for selecting a single control component or party matrix in accordance with the register value of the party digit. The relays 2ON, 2T0, and ZTR also prepare operating paths for the reset magnet 3DCZ and the party transfer relay 2PT.

Following a suitable time interval sufficient to cover the above described operations, the shunt slave relay SSHS, the operating circuit for which was interrupted by the release of the shunt relay SSHS, releases to open the contacts 2SHS1, 2SHS2, 3SHS1, 3SHS2, and 3SHS5 and to close the plurality of contacts 3SHS3, 3SI-IS4, and 351-156. The contacts 3SHS1 remove the shunt around the winding of the supervisory relay 35R, while the closure of the contacts 351-153 and 3SHS4 interconnects this winding of the relay 35R with the line conductors of the trunk circuit. The opening of the contacts 381-185 and 351-182 disconnects ground and grounded battery from the line conductors of the trunk circuit. The opening of the contacts 2SHS1 interrupts the above described circuit for supplying ground to the wipers 2DC1, 2DC2, and 2DC3 of the stepping switch DC.

The opening of the contacts 2SHS2 interrupts the above described operating circuit for the space relay 25? so that this relay releases to open the contacts 3SP1 and 4SP1. The opening of the contacts 4Sll interrupts at an additional point the above described operating circuit for the space pulse head 540, and the opening of the contacts 3SP1 interrupts the operating circuit for the second space relay 3SPS so that this relay releases to close the contacts 4SPS1 and to open the contacts 4SPS2. The closure of the contacts 4SPS1 prepares the above described operating circuit for the space pulse head 5-10, and the opening of the contacts 4SPS2 interrupts the above described operating circuit for the drive magnet 530, thereby permitting the drive mechanism to advance the magnetic tape in the trunk recorder 500 a single step following the recording of the space pulse thereon.

Referring back to the above described release of the shunt slave relay SSHS, the closure of the contacts 3SHS6 completes an operating circuit for the release magnet 3DCZ of the stepping switch DC extending from ground at either of the closed contacts 3TO1 or 3TR1 through the closed contacts 3SHS6, 3PT5, and the closed oif-normal contacts 3DC1 of the stepping switch DC. In response to energization of the magnet 3DCZ, the wipers 2DC1, 2DC2, 2DC3, and 2DC4 are mechanically returned to their normal position illustrated in Fig. 2 of the drawings. The energization of the magnet 3DCZ also closes a pair of release magnet springs 4DCZ1 to apply ground to a terminal 405 through a parallel combination of a resistor 46? and an alarm lamp 406. The continuous maintenance of ground on the terminal 495 provides delayed illumination of the lamp 496 to provide a visible indication in the event that the release magnet 3DCZ is not released within a selected period of time.

In restoring the wipers ZDCI, 2DC2, 2DC3, and ZDOl of the stepping switch DC to their normal home positions,

the olf-normal contacts 3DC2 are opened, which perform no useful function, and the contacts 3DC1 are opened to release the release magnet ZDCZ so as to open the contacts 4DCZ1. The restoration of the wipers 2DC1- ZDC-t to their home positions also completes an operating circuit for the party transfer relay ZPT extending from closed and grounded contacts 3SH2 over the wiper 2DC4 and through the closed contacts 2TO7 and ZTRS in parallel and a pair of normally closed contacts ZPTl. The completion of this circuit operates the party transfer relay ZPT to indicate the completion of the operations of the trunk circuit in which the party digit is stored in the party digit register relays ZON, 2T0, 2TR, and ZSTI and in which the value of this digit is stored in the trunk recorder 500. In operating, the party transfer relay SEPT conditions the trunk circuit to repeat the next dialed digits from the switch train over the trunk conductors to the remote switching equipment 300, thereby to establish a connection to the called substation B. The party transfer relay further conditions the stepping switch DC to count the number of dialed digits to prevent the transmission of superfluous digits to the trunk recorder 500 and over the trunk circuit to the remote switching equipment 300.

The operation of the party transfer relay closes a plurality of contacts 2PT2, 2PT3, 3PT3, and SPTI and opens a plurality of contacts 2PT1, 2PT4, 3PT1, 3PT2, 3PT4, and 3PT5. The contacts ZPTI and ZPTZ form a make-before-break contact arrangement so that the closure of the contacts 2PT2 completes a holding circuit to the closed and grounded contacts 2RD2 prior to the opening of the contacts 2PT1 to interrupt the operating circuit for the party transfer relay 2PT. The opening of the contacts 2PT4 interrupts, at an additional point, the above described circuit for applying ground to the wipers 2DC1, ZDCZ, and 2DC3. The closure of the contacts 2PT3 prepares an operating circuit for a last digit relay 2LD extending to the seventh contact in the contact bank engaged by the wiper ZDC t, thereby preparing the last digit relay 2LD for operation following the transmission of seven digits over the extended switch train to the trunk circuit. The opening of the contacts 3PT1 and 3PT2 conditions the signaling circuit in the trunk circuit for operation by the contacts 3CB1 and 3CB2 controlled by the calling bridge relay 3C8 so that dial pulses transmitted to the trunk circuit are repeated over the trunk conductors to the remote switching equipment 300. The closure of the contacts 3PT3 prepares an operating circuit for the motor magnet 3DC of the stepping switch DC so that this switch is enabled to count the digits transmitted to the trunk circuit from the calling substation A, and the concurrent opening of the contacts 3PT4 interrupts the above described operating circuit for the motor magnet 3DC. The opening of the contacts 3PT5 interrupts, at an additional point, the operating circuit for the reset magnet SDCZ. The closure of the contacts 5PT1 prepares an operating circuit for a clock-calendar relay SCC. The trunk circuit is now conditioned to receive the series of pulses representing the directory number of the called subscriber B.

Assuming that a conventional 25 numbering scheme is utilized, the calling bridge relay 3CB is released in response to the first calling loop circuit interruption produced by dialing the first digit identifying the called substation B, thereby to close the contacts ZCBI and to open the contacts 2CB2, 3CB1, and 3CB2. The opening of the contacts 3CB1 and 3CB2 produces no useful function at this time, and the opening of the contacts ZCBZ again interrupts the operating circuit for the release delay relay 2RD which does not release at this time due to the slow-to-release characteristic thereof. The closure of the contacts 2CB1 sequentially operates the mark relay 3MK, the second mark relay 5MKS, the shunt relay SSH, and the shunt slave relay SSHS, as described above, so as to momentarily energize the mark pulse head 57.0 to record 317 a single mark-pulse on the magnetic tape of the trunk recorder 500 and to energizethe drive magnet 530 to condition the magnetic tape for a single step of advancement.

The sequential operation of the shuntrelay SSH and the shunt slave relay SSHS produces the same functions described above with the following exception. The closure of the contacts BSHSZ and 3SHS5 extends grounded battery and ground to the now open contacts 3CB1 and 3CB2 controlled by the calling bridge relay 3GB in preparation for providing ground and battery for pulsing the conductors of the trunk circuit extending to the remote switching equipment 300. The closure of the contacts 3SH3 completes the energizing circuit for the motor magnet 3DC so that the contacts 2DC5 are opened and the wipers 2DC1, ZDCZ, ZDCS, and 2DC4 are advanced to the first contacts in the contact bank associated therewith, thereby representing the dialing of the first digit of the called subscriber designation. The opening of the contacts ZDCS produces no useful function at this time. in advancing the switch DC off-normal, the off normal contacts 3DC1 and 3DC2 are closed. The closure of the contacts 3DC1 prepares an operating circuit for the release magnet 3DCZ, which is now interrupted at the open contacts 3PT5, and the closure of the contacts SDCZ again provides a source of holding ground for the sleeve lead of the extended connection, which ground is ineffective due to the open contacts 3RDS2.

When the calling bridge relay 3GB is again operated in response to reclosure of the calling loop circuit at the calling substation A, the contacts 2CB2, 3CB1, and 3CB2 are closed, and the contacts 2CB1 are opened. The opening of the contacts ZCBI releases the mark relay SMK and the second mark relay 5MKS to permit the magnet 534) to release and thus advance the magnetic tape in the recorder 500 a single step following the recording of the first mark pulse representing the value of the first dialed digit of the called subscriber designation. The closure of the contacts 2CB2 again completes the operating circuit for the release delay relay 2RD. The closure of the contacts 3CB1 and 3CB2 applies grounded battery and ground, respectively, to the conductors of the trunk circuit extending to the remote switching equipment 300, thereby to provide a first switch directing pulse to control the switching equipment 300 in establishing a connection to the called substation B.

When the calling bridge relay 3GB isnext released in response to a line interruption, the contacts 2CB1 are again closed to sequentially operate the mark relay 3MK and the second mark relay SMKS to record a second pulse on the magnetic tape in the trunk recorder S80 and to energize the drive magnet 530 in preparation for advancing the magnetic tape a single step. Further, in operating, the contacts 3CB1 and 3CB2 are again opened to remove grounded battery and ground, respectively, from the conductors of the trunk circuit to terminate the firstpulse supplied to the remote switching equipment 360. This intermittent operation and release of the calling bridge relay 3GB continues until such time as the series or group of pulses representing the value of the first dialed digit has been transmitted to the remote switching equipment 300 and also recorded on the magnetic tape in the trunk recorder 500.

In the interdigit interval following the completion of the transmission of this group of impulses, the shunt relay SSH releases after its slow-to-release interval to open the contacts 3811?: so as to interrupt the above described operating circuit for the motor magnet '3DC of the stepping switch DC. The switch, in releasing, again closes the interrupter contacts 2DC5 which produces no useful function at this time. Further, as described above, the sequential release of the shunt relay SSH and the shunt slave relay SSHS in closing the contacts-2SH1 and in opening the contactsZSHSZ momentarily energizes the space relay ZSP and the second space relay 3898 so that 318 a single space pulse is recorded on the magnetic tape of the trunk recorder 500 immediately following the first digit in the designation of the called subscriber B.

In this manner, the calling bridge relay 3GB, the first and second mark relays 3MK and SMKS, the first and second space relays 2S? and 3SPS, the shunt relay SSH, the shunt slave relay SSHS, and the motor magnet 3DC operate during the next six digits transmitted over the extended switch train to the trunk circuit to record the values of these digits on the magnetic tape in the trunk recorder 506 in the form of groups of mark pulses including pulses equal in number to the value of the digit. The dial pulses are further repeated over the trunk circuit to the remote switching equipment 300 to control the establishment of a switch train to the called subscriber B in the remote area. Concurrently therewith, the shunt relay SSH sequentially advances the stepping switch DC so that the wipers ZDCl, ZDCZ, 2DC3, and 2DC4 thereof are advanced over the contacts engaged thereby so that, at the completion of the transmission of this sixth additional digit, or the seventh digit, the wiper 2DC4, together with the other wipers in the switch DC, are positioned in engagement with the seventh contact in the contact bank associated therewith. In this position, the wiper 2DC4 is connected to the operating winding of the last digit relay ZLD through a circuit including the closed pairs of contacts 2PT3 and ZLDl. The selective'operation of the last digit relay informs the trunk circuit that the proper complement of digits necessary for extending a connection to a remote subscriber, such as the called substation B, has been both transmitted and recorded in the trunk recorder 500, and, accordingly, the last digit relay provides means for preventing the storing of additional digits in the trunk recorder 500 and for likewise preventing the transmission of additional information over the trunk circuit to the remote switching equip ment 300.

More specifically, in the interdigit interval following the dialing of the last of the seven digits dialed to obtain access to the called substation B, the shunt relay 55H releases, as described above, and in doing so closes the contacts 3SH2 to complete an operating circuit for the last digit relay 2LD extending over the Wiper 2DC4 through the seventh contact in the bank associated therewith and the closed contacts 2PT3 and 2LD1. Concurrently therewith, the closure of the contacts ZSHll completes the above described operating circuit extending to the space relay ZSP so that this relay and the second space relay 3SPS sequentially operate to record a space pulse on the tape in the trunk recorder 5% immediately following the seventh dialed digit of the called subscriber designation and to energize the drive magnet 530 to condition the magnetic tape for a single step of advancement.

In operating, the last digit relay closes a plurality of contacts ZLDZ, 3LD1, and 3LD2 and opens a plurality of contacts 2LD1, 2LD3, and 5LD1. The contacts 21.131 and ZLDZ form a make-before-break contact arrangement in which the closure of the contacts ZLDZ completes a holding circuit for the relay ZLD extending to the closed and grounded contacts ZRDZ prior to the opening of the contacts 2LD1 to interrupt the above described operating circuit for this relay. The opening of the contacts 2LD3 interrupts the above described pulsing path for the mark relay 3MK and thus prevents further pulsing of the calling bridge relay 3GB from controllingthe recording of information in the trunk recorder 500. The closure of the contacts 31.131 and 3LD2 provides a shunt around the contacts 3CB1 and 3CB2. controlled by the calling bridge relay 3C3 and thus prevents the transmission of additional pulse information to the remote switching equipment 3%. The opening of the contacts SLDl interrupts the above described operating circuit for the shunt relay 53H so that further operation of the second mark pulse relay SMKS incident to recording clock and calendar infor- 19 mation and other items of information, such as the designation of the calling substation A, does not produce an accompanying operation of the shunt relay SSH and the shunt slave relay SSHS.

The next item of information received by the trunk circuit is supplied from the remote area over the trunk circuit and comprises either steady reverse battery answering supervisory signals or an intermittent reverse battery signal indicating a busy condition. The supervisory relay 35R, which is connected across the conductors from the trunk circuit through the closed contacts 3SHS3 and 3SHS4 and 3LD1 and 3LD2 responds to these signals either to prevent the recording of additional information. in the event that a busy tone is received, or to provide an indication that the necessary additional items of information pertaining to the toll call are to be recorded. in the event that answering reverse battery supervision is received.

Assuming that busy signals are received by the trunk circuit indicating that the connection cannot be completed to the called subscriber B, the supervisory relay 35R is operated to close a pair of contacts 38R! which completes an obvious operating circuit for a second super visory relay 3SRS extending to the closed and grounded contacts 2RD2. The operation of the second supervisory relay SSRS closes a pair of contacts ZSRSI and opens a pair of contacts ZSRSZ. The opening of the contacts ZSRSZ interrupts an additional point in the above described pulsing circuit extending to the mark relay 3MK which is controlled by the contacts ZCBI. The closure of the contacts ZSRSl forwards ground from the closed contacts ZRDZ to the operating winding of a timer clutch 234i forming a portion of the timing mechanism whose drive motor 360 was previously energized by the closure of the contacts 3RD2. Thi timing mechanism, which is individual to the trunk circuit, preferably is of the type disclosed in the copending application of Armistead Wharton. Serial No. 497,760, filed March 29, 1955, which application is assigned to the same assignee as the present application. In general, the timing mechanism disclosed therein comprises an electric clock motor 360 for driving a mechanical cam arrangement through an intervening clutch 230 so that the cam arrangement is adapted to close a pair of contacts 231 to provide a control pulse or signal at the end of a relatively short interval of time, such as an interval of from one to two seconds, during which a busy test is performed by the trunk circuit to determine the idle or busy condition of the line extending to the called subscriber B. The timing mechanism also includes a pair of normally open contacts 232 which are initially closed to provide a first duration impulse approximately sixty-five to sixty-seven seconds following the cnergization of the clutch 230 and Which thereafter are operated to provide duration impulses at one minute intervals, thereby to provide a means for recording information pertaining to the length of the toll call. This mechanism is such that, in response to termination of the energization of the timer clutch 230, the cam mechanism is immediately returned to its normal starting position so that. upon reenergization of the clutch 236, the contacts 23l and 232 are again closed in the sequence described above.

Therefore, when the timer clutch 230 is energized by the closure of the contacts ZSRSI in response to operating the second supervisory relay 3SRS, the timing mechanism is placed in operation so that, after an interval of between one to two seconds, the contacts 231 are closed. However, if, as assumed above, a sixty cycle busy flashing signal is being received by the trunk circuit, the supervisory relay 35R is released to release the second supervisory relay 3SRS before the completion of the timing out of the control timing interval provided by the contacts 231. The release of the second supervisory relay BSRS opens the contacts ZSRS] to terminate energiza tion of the timer clutch 230 so that the cam arrangement forming a portion of this timer is immediately restored 20 to a normal condition. Thereafter, the supervisory relays 3SR and 3SRS and the timer clutch 230 are intermittently operated and released in accordance with the busy flashing supplied to the supervisory relay 35R from the remote switching equipment 300.

This intermittent operation continues until such time as the subscriber at the calling substation A, in response to the receipt of busy tone, opens the calling loop circuit to release the calling bridge relay 3GB, the party transfer relay 2P1", the last digit relay 2LD, and the release delay relays 2RD, ZRDS, and 3RDT and to restore the stepping switch DC to its normal position. Incident to these operations and as described in detail hereinafter, the stepping switch DC cooperates with a pulse assist relay ZPA and an end-of-call relay 2EC to provide a measured or counted number of steps of advancement of the magnetic tape in the trunk recorder 500 immediately following the recording of an end-of-call code representing the end of the items of information pertaining to the incomplete call. The measured run-off of the magnetic tape provides a space between the items of information pertaining to this incomplete call and those pertaining to the next call placed through the trunk circuit.

However, assuming that steady reverse battery answering supervisory signals are received by the trunk circuit from the remote switching equipment 300, the supervisory relay 35R and the second supervisory relay 3SRS are operated, as described above, to close the contacts 3SR1, ZSRSI, and to open the contacts 2SRS2. The closure of the contacts 2SRS1 energizes the timer clutch 230 so that the cam arrangement is advanced under the control of the timer motor 230 to close the contacts 231 after an interval of between one to two seconds. The closure of the contacts 231 completes an obvious operating circuit for a third supervisory relay 2SRT extending to the closed and grounded contacts 2RD2 through a pair of closed contacts 2SRT3. The operation of the third supervisory relay 25R indicates the satisfactory completion of the busy test and thus initiates the recording of the remainder of the necessary items of information pertaining to this toll call.

More specifically, the operation of the third supervisory relay ZSRT closes a plurality of contacts ZSRTI, ZSRTZ, and 2SRT4 and opens the contacts 2SRT3. The contacts 2SRT3 and 2SRT4 form a make-before-brcak contact arrangement so that the closure of the contacts 2SRT4 completes a holding circuit extending to the closed and grounded contacts 2RD2 prior to the opening of the contacts 2SRT3 to interrupt the above described op erating circuit for the relay 2SRT. The closure of the contacts 2SRT2 provides an alternative path for energizing the timer clutch 230 which is shunted around the contacts 2SRS1 so that, in the event that the connection is released or the line is flashed to intermittently operate and release the relays 35R and 3SRS, the timer clutch 230 cannot be released to restore the timer to a normal condition. In this manner, the timing of the call is continuously maintained following the expiration of the one to two second interval provided prior to the closure of the contacts 231 and the consequent operation of the third supervisory relay ZSRT.

To initiate the recording of the next date and time item of information in the trunk recorder 500, the closure of the contacts 2SRT1 completes an operating circuit for a pickup relay ZPU extending through a plurality of closed contacts 2PU2, 2IC3, ZCCI, and 2SRT1 to the clockcalender circuit 220. As described in detail in the above identified copending Clement ct al. application, the clockcalendar circuit 220 supplies ground over the above described circuit to operate the pickup relay 2PU, if the clock-calendar circuit 220 is idle at the time that the contacts 2SRT1 are closed. The operation of the pickup relay 2PU closes a plurality of contacts 2PU1, 2PU3, 2PU5, 2PU7, 2PU8, and 5PU1 and opens a plurality of contacts 2PU2, 2PU4, and 2PU6. The contacts ZPUI and ZPUZ form a make-before-break contact arrangement so that the closure of the contacts 2PU1 completes a holding circuit for the pickup relay ZPU extending to the clock-calendar circuit 2520 prior to the opening of the contacts 2PU2 to interrupt the above described operating circuit for this relay. The opening of the contacts 2PU4 interrupts an additional point in the above described pulsing path for the mark relay 3MK, and the concurrent closure of the contacts 2PU5 connects the operating winding of the mark relay 3MK to the clock-calendar circuit 220 so that the mark relay SMK is new controlled by ground pulses provided by the clock-calendar circuit 22%) in accordance with date and time information. The opening of the contacts 2PU6 interrupts the above described pulsing path for the space relay 28F, and the concurrent closure of the contacts 2PU7 connects the operating winding of this relay to the clock-calendar circuit 220 so that the space relay 28? and the second space relay 3SPS are conditioned for operation in accordance with pulses supplied by the circuit 220.

The closure of the contacts 2PU8 provides an additional source of holding ground for the release delay relay 2RD to maintain this relay operated and, accordingly, the trunk circuit in an operative condition in the event that the connection is released during the interval that the clock-calendar circuit 220 provides information to the trunk recorder 5053. As set forth above, following the completion of the timing of the interval determined by the contacts 231, the call is to be assessed to a subscriber, and, accordingly, additional holding ground means are provided for maintaining the trunk circuit in an operative condition to permit the recording of complete information pertaining to the toll call even though the connection is released by the subscriber.

The closure of the contacts SPUl completes a preliminary operating circuit for a clock-calendar relay 5CC of the two step type so that this relay operates to close a pair of preliminary make contacts 5CC1 and to open a pair of preliminary break type contacts 2CC1. The closure of the contacts SCCl prepares a full operating circuit for the relay SCC, but this relay does not completely operate until the ground shunt around the right hand operating winding thereof is removed by the opening of the contacts 5PU1. The opening of the contacts 2CC1 prevents reoperation of the pickup relay 2PU following the completion of the transmission of the date and time information from the clock-calendar circuit 220 to the trunk recorder 500.

Referring to the above described operation of the pickup relay ZPU, the closure of the contacts 2PU3 applies ground to the clock-calendar circuit 220 to initiate a cycle of operation thereof during which a plurality of groups of mark pulses representing instant date and time are transmitted over the above described circuit to the operating winding of the mark relay 3MK, thereby to cause the recording of this information in the recorder 550. plurality of ground pulses for operating the space relay 28? to record space pulses on the magnetic tape between adjacent groups of the mark pulses, as described above in conjunction with the recording of the dialed digits representing the designation of the called substation B. When all of the necessary items of information pertaining to date and time have been transmitted from the clockcalendar circuit 220, the pickup relay ZPU is released to cause the full operation of the clock-calendar relay 5CC as an indication that all of the date and time information has been transmitted to the trunk recorder 500.

More specifically, in response to the completion of the transmission of the necessary information by the clockcalendar circuit 220 and in the manner described in detail in the above identified copending Clement et al. application, ground is removed from the conductor extending to the holding contacts ZPUl of the pickup relay 2PU so that this relay releases to open the contacts 2PU1, 2PU3,

The clock-calendar circuit 220 also provides a 2PU5, 2PU7, ZPUS, and 5PU1 and to close the contacts ZPUZ, 2PU4, and 2PU6. The opening of the contacts 2PU5 and 2PU7 and the closure of the contacts 2PU4 and 2PU6 interrupt the pulsing paths for the mark and space pulse relays SMK and ZSP previously extended to the clock-calendar circuit 220 and initiate the preparation of additional circuits extending to these relays. The opening of the contacts 2PU1 and the closure of the contacts ZPUZ interrupt the holding circuit for the pickup relay ZPU and reestablish the above described operating circuit for this relay, the operating circuit, however, being maintained interrupted at the open contacts ZCCl. The opening of the contacts 2PU3 removes start ground from the clock-calendar circuit 220, and the opening of the contacts 2PU8 removes the source of holding ground from the release delay relay 2RD.

However, the opening of the contacts SPUl removes the ground shunt around the right hand operating winding of the two step clock-calendar relay SCC so that this relay now fully operates to close a plurality of contacts ZCCZ, 3CC1, and 3CC2. The closure of the contacts 2CC2 reestablishes the holding ground source for the release delay relay 2RD to maintain this relay operated in the event that the connection has previously been re leased, this relay normally being held operated by the closed contacts ZCBZ. The closure of the contacts SCCE provides marking ground on a conductor individual to the trunk circuit which extends to the banks of contacts of the switching devices associated with the identifier sender, such as the identifier sender 31G, thereby to mark this trunk circuit as requiring the association of an identifier sender. The closure of the contacts 3CC2 extends start ground to a terminal 311 which is connected to an identifier sender allotter (not shown) which preferably is of the type disclosed in the above identified copendingClement et al. application. The application of start ground to the identifier sender allotter causes the allotter to actuate the switch in a preselected idle identifier sender, such as the sender 310, to search for and seize the contact multiples individual to the calling trunk circuit. Accordingly, in response to the completion of the transmission of date and time information, as signified by the release of the pickup relay ZPU and the conse quent full operation of the clock-calendar relay 5CC, an. automatic calling line identification operation is initiated.

To initiate the automatic calling line identification operation and as described in detail in the above identified copending Clement et al. application, the switching means indicated schematically in conjunction with the block diagram of the identifier sender 310 is placed in operation so that a plurality of wipers 310a, 310b, 3N0, and SIM step over their associated contact banks with the wiper 31th: searching for the marking ground provided at the closed contacts 3CC1. When the wiper 310a moves into engagement with the contacts grounded by the closed contacts 3CC1, in which position the other wipers 310b, 3100, and 310d likewise engage contact multiples individual to this trunk circuit, the identifier sender 310 forwards ground over the Wiper 3100 to complete an obvious operating circuit for a start identification relay 3SD.

The operation of the relay 3SD closes a plurality of contacts 2SD1, 2SD3, ZSDd, 3SD2, 3SD3, 3SD4, 3SD6, and 3SD7 and opens a plurality of contacts 2SD2, 3SD1, and 3SD5. The contacts 3SD4 and 3SD5 form a makebefore-break contact arrangement so that the closure of the contacts SSDS completes a holding circuit for the relay 38D extending to the closed and grounded contacts 3CC1 prior to the opening of the contacts 3SD4 to interrupt the above described operating circuit for the relay SSD. The opening of the contacts 3SD1 interrupts the above described operating circuits for the mark relay 3MK, and the concurrent closure of the contacts 3SD2 prepares an operating circuit for this relay extending over the wiper 310!) to the identifier sender 310 to T condition the mark relay SMK for subsequent operation by ground pulses applied to the wiper 31Gb from the identifier sender 316. The opening of the contacts 2SD2 interrupts the above described operating circuits for the space relay ESP, and the concurrent closure of the contacts ZSDE: interconnects the winding of this relay with the wiper filth! to permit oteration of the space relay 25? in accordance with ground pulses applied to the wiper 31th! by the identifier sender 310. The closure of the COtliaCiS ZEiDl provides an alternative path shunted around the closed contacts ZlClt for supplying holding ground to the operated ones of the party digit register relays EON. 2T0, 2 it, and ZSTT. The closure of the contacts 35D? prepares an operating circuit for the noidentificution relay :llii. The closure of the contact ZED-"- providcs an additional source of holding ground {or the release delay relay 2RD to maintain this relay operated in the event that t e connection is released during the recording of calling line identification information.

The closure of the contacts SSDG completes an obvious operating L'llCllll for an identify relay 31D extending to the ground provided on the wiper 3510c so that this relay operates to close the plurality of contacts 2ID1, 2lD2, RIDE, and Ztt'Dl. The closure of the contacts 31.01 provides an rdditional source of holding ground for the start identification relay 35D and for extension over the wiper F l h: to the itlentifie sender 318.

The o ation or the identity relay 3lD supplies the identification potential for return over the HS lead of the extended switch train to selectively energize the identification matrix circuit 63 and also completes the paths prepared by the selective operation of the party digit register relays ZETO, ZTR. and ZSTT for operating the party matrix :avitching circuit 660 in accordance with the sin value of the dialed party digit. More specifically. the closure of the contacts ZZDZ completes the path extending through the previously closed contacts ZTR l and ZZTOt-i to extend grounded battery to the 5 or 10" conductor in the party matrix switching circuit 600. The closure of t u: contacts ZlDl extends ground through the closed contacts 2ST'l'-l to complete the operating circuit for th above five relay GAP so that this relay operates to a plurality of contacts EAFi, GAFZ, 6AF3, and 6AF5. The closure of the contacts 6AF5 fiAl-t. extends the grounded battery provided on the "5 or 10" conductor to the conductor connected to the operating windin or" a cut-through relay dltl associated with the party tea matrix 630 in accordance with the above described position of the calling substation A on the terminal per stati n multiparty line. The operation of the relay filtl interconnects the party ten matrix 630 with the plurality of common 1313s es extending to the input of the identifier circuit 690. thereby to prepare the identifier eircuit for receiving digital information representing the directory number of the tenth party on the term nal station multi-party line. If the registered party Cia i rather than "10. the re- .ts tuned to be 3 lay 25W remains released so that the closure of the contact TllB-i operates the oneofive relay OTF to close a plurality of cen s. s RD' LQOTFE no that a party five matrix switch relay (not shown) is operated.

The closure of the contacts ZED? extends an identification potential from the power supply circuit 21% over the HS lead of the extended switch train through the selector 104 and the finder 102 to the HS multiple of the calling line circuit 1357, thereby permitting this potential to be extended over the identification conductor ill) to the terminal Till. The terminal 111, in accordance with the above assumption that the calling substation A is located in the tenth position or. a terminal per station multiparty line, is connected to the plurality of party matrices 610, 620, and 63 8 so that each of these individual party matrices is energized to provide digital information representing the directory numbers of all of the substations on the line terminating in the line circuit 00. However,

Cir

24 the output of only the party ten matrix 630 is cut through to the input of the identifier circuit 690, as described above, so that these signals selectively operate the identifier circuit 690 in accordance with the four digits forming the directory number of the calling substation A. The output of the identifier circuit 690 is extended over a cable 691 to the input of the identifier sender 316 so that digit registering components in the sender Bit) are operated in accordance with the values of the four digits forming the directory number of the calling substation A.

Referring back to the preceding operation of the start identification relay 35D, the closure of the contacts 3SD3 completes an operating circuit for an identification complete relay 31C extending from the closed and grounded contacts 3RDS4. Operation of the identification com plete relay 31C opens a plurality of contacts ZlCl, 2IC3, ZICS, and SICI and closes a plurality of contacts 2lC2, 210i, and ZICL The closure of the contacts 31C! completes an obvious holding circuit for the slow-to-relcasc identification complete relay SIC. The closure of the contacts ZICZ prepares an operating circuit for the space relay 251. The opening of the contacts ZlCl interrupts the above described holding circuit for the operated party digit register relays 2T0, ZTR, and ZSTT, but this holding circuit is maintained through the closed contacts ZSDl. The opening of the contacts ZICS interrupts, at an additional point, the above described operating circuit for the marl: relay EMK, and the concurrent closure of the contacts 210% prepares a path for operating the mark relay 33th. under the control of the timer contacts 232. The opening of the contacts 2iC3 interrupts. at an additional point. the operating circuit for the picltup relay ZPU, thereby to prevent reoperation of this relay.

The opening of the contacts :"tlCl interrupts the :thovc described operating circuit for the clock-calendar relay SCC, thereby to release this relay to close the contacts ZCCl and to open the contacts ZCCZ, BCCI, IJCCZ. and ECCl. The opening of the contacts :"SCCl interrupts, at an additional point, the operating circuit for the clockcalendar relay SCC. The closure of the contacts ZCCl prepares a portion of the operating circuit for the pickup relay ZPU, which circuit is interrupted at the open contacts 2lC3. The opening of the contacts ZCCZ TLZlllOr'cfi a source of holding ground for the release delay relay 2RD, but this relay is maintained operated by the ground provided at the closed contacts ZCBZ and IlSlli. Since the identification complete relay ZilC is operated and the cloclscalendar relay SCC released in response to the completion of the association of the identifier sender 310 with the trunl; circuit, the opening of the contacts SCCZ removes start ground from the terminal Eltlt .vhicit is connected to the identifier sender allotter. thereby to restore the allotter to a normal condition. Further. the opening of the contacts 3C0; removes marking ground from the wiper 316a and holding ground from the relay 38D, but the closed contacts SlDt maintain ground on these circuits.

As described above, in response to the operation of the identity relay Fill), the party matrix switching circuit out] is selectively operated in accordance with the paths prepared by the selective operation of the operated party digit register relays 2T0, ZTR, and ZSTl to render the party ten matrix can ctl'ective to supply signals to the identifier circuit 6%. The operation of the identity relay 31D further extends the identification potential over the HS lead to the extended switch train to the terminal ill which is assumed to be connected in the party ten matrix 630, thereby to energize the input of the identifier circuit 690 in accordance with signals representing the digits forming the directory number of the calling substation A on a terminal or station multiparty line. These signals are conducted over the output cable 691 to the identifier sender 310 to store these digits in the identifier sender 318. In the event that an adequate calling line identification is provided in the identifier sender 310, the sender 316 signals the trunk circuit that the transmission of the l stored digits to the trunk recorder 500 may proceed.

ation is desirable inasmuch as the failure of the automatic calling line identification means prevents the proper assessment of the toll charge for the call.

Assuming that adequate calling line identification information has not been received from the identifier circuit 690 and stored in the identifier sender 310, the sender 310 operates, as described in detail in the above identified copending Clement et al. application and Harris application, to apply ground to the upper operating winding of a no-identification relay 3N1 through the closed contacts 3SD7 to operate this relay to close a plurality of contacts SNII and 3NI3 and to open a pair of contacts 3Nl2. The closure of the contacts 3NI3 completes a holding circuit extending to the lower winding of the relay 3N1 from the closed and grounded contacts 3RDS4. The closure of the contacts 3NI1 interconnects a terminal 331 with the tip conductor of the extended switch train through a coupling condenser, the terminal 331 being connected to a source of busy tone to provide an audible indication to the subscriber at the calling substation A that the connection cannot be completed. The opening of the contacts SNIZ opens up the outgoing loop circuit from the trunk circuit, thereby to prevent the extension of the connection to the called subscriber B. In response to the receipt of busy tone, the connection is released by the calling subscriber at the substation A to release Y the calling bridge relay 3GB and restore the remainder of the operated components in the trunk circuit to a normal condition. Incident to these releasing operations and as described in detail hereinafter, the end-of-call relay ZEC records an end-of-call code comprising simultaneous mark and space pulses on the magnetic tape of the trunk recorder Silt), and thereafter the stepping switch DC, the end-of-call relay ZEC, and the pulse assist relay 2PA cooperate to advance the magnetic tape in the trunk recorder 5% a predetermined number of steps controlled by the stepping switch DC.

However, assuming that adequate calling line identification information is received by the identifier sender and, in response to the storage thereof as described in detail in the above identified copending Clement et al. application or in the above identified copending Harris application, the identifier sender 310 supplies resistance ground to the wiper 310:; which is sufficient to maintain the start identification relay 38D operated but which is not sufficient to act as marking ground on the contact multiple individual to the trunk circuit with which the wiper 310a is in engagement. Further, the identifier sender 310 removes ground from the wiper 31% to open the operating circuit for the identify relay 31D so that this relay releases to open the contacts ZIDL ZIDZ, 2ID3, and 3ID1. I

The opening of the contacts 3ID1 removes the source of direct holding ground for the start identification relay 38D, but this relay remains operated over the resistance ground provided on the wiper 310a by the identifier sender 310. The opening of the contacts 21131 removes grounded battery from the operating winding of the above five relay fiAF, thereby releasing this relay to open the contacts dAFl to 6AFS, inclusive. The opening of the contacts 2ID2 removes grounded battery from the path prepared by the selective operation of the relays 2T0 and ZTR extending to the operating winding of the relay 670, thereby releasing this cut-through relay for the party ten matrix 63$) and thus effectively disconnecting this matrix from the input of the identifier circuit 690. The opening of the contacts 2ID3 removes the identification potential from the HS lead of the extended switch train and from the energized party matrices, such as the matrices 610, 620, and 630. Accordingly, in response to the release of the identify relay 31D, the identification matrix circuit 680 and the party matrix switching circuit 66% together with the identifier circuit 690 are effectively released for use in conjunction with the identification of other calling substations.

Incident to the removal of ground from the wiper 3100 and the consequent release of the identify relay 31D, the identifier sender 310 initiates the transmission of four groups of mark pulses separated by space pulses to the mark pulse relay 3MK and the space pulse relay 2SP for intermittently operating these relays in conjunction with the second mark relay SMKS and the second space relay 3SPS to record groups of mark pulses separated by space pulses on the magnetic tape of the trunk recorder 500 in accordance with the values of the digits forming the directory number or designation of the calling substation A. In this manner, the trunk recorder 500 is automatically provided with digits forming the directory number of the calling substation in the event that the identifier sender 310 is provided with adequate identification information by the identifier circuit 6%.

Following the completion of the transmission of this digital information from the identifier sender 310 to the trunk recorder 500, resistance ground is removed from the wiper 310a to release the start identification relay 35D. In releasing, this relay opens the contacts 2SD1, 2SD3, 2SD4 3SD2, 3SD3, 3SD4, 3SD6, and 3SD7 and closes the contacts ZSDZ, 3SD1, and 3SD5. The operations of the contacts 33134, $SD5, and 3SD6 prepare the above described operating circuits for the start identification relay 38D and the identify relay 31D. The opening of the contacts 38D? interrupts the above described operating circuit for the no-identification relay SNL The opening of the contacts 3SD2 interrupts the above described operating circuit for the mark relay 3MK, and the concurrent closure of the contacts 3SD1 interconnects the operating winding of the mark relay 3M1; with the prepared pulsing path extending to the contacts 232 controlled by the trunk timing mechanism. The opening of the contacts 3SD3 interrupts the above described operating circuit for the identification complete relay 3IC, but this relay remains operated over the holding circuit completed at the contacts 3IC1. The opening of the contacts 2SD3 interrupts the above described circuit extending to the identifier sender 310 for operating the space relay ZSP, and the concurrent closure of the contacts ZSDZ prepares another operating path for the space relay ZSP. The opening of the contacts 2SD4 removes the source of holding ground for the release delay relay 2RD, but this relay is maintained operated by the closed contacts 2CB2.

The opening of the contacts ZSDl interrupts the above described holding circuit for the operated party digit register relays 2T0, ZTR, and ZSTT so that these relays release to restore the contacts controlled thereby to a normal condition. The restoration of the contacts controlled by these relays to their normal condition aids in conditioning the trunk circuit for another cycle of recording operation, but produces no other useful function at this time.

The trunk circuit is now in condition to record duration information in the trunk recorder 500 under the control of the timing mechanism individual to this trunk circuit. The release of the start identification relay 38D, in closing the contacts SSDl, prepares a path extending through the closed contacts 2PU4 and 2IC4 to a pair of contacts 232 controlled by the timing mechanism. As designated above, the contacts 232 are first closedafter an interval of approximately sixty-five to sixty-seven seconds following the energization of the timer clutch 230 in response to the receipt of answering supervisory signals from the 27 one minute interval at which pulses are to be recorded in the trunk recorder 500 as a representation of the duration oi the toll call. However, this additional time interval is added to the first mini 2 to be recorded in trunk recorder $60 to all' w for the disconnect time of the switch 1 in response to the release of the connection at the ter tion oi the oil callt lfthis interva allows for disconnect time were till provided. it would be possible for it subscriber to gioivliool; at a time substantia ly at the end of a. metered one minute interval, onnect ime of the extended switch train cti' as to r of an additional cue mi.

Jl'LlEl 56d, thcieay to cause a roll char e to be assessed for an ctr. tioniil minute of conpnlsc in the trunk rec.

versation time. Ey the provision of a rice reprcseating duration information which in tr: :i t n-r interval following a sixty second interval which is approximately equal to the grea est disconnect time of the switch train, this improper assessment of an additional one minute interval to the subscriber is prevented.

riccordiugly, alter an interval of between sixty-five to sixty-seven seconds following the receipt of answer supervision. the contacts 23?; close to extend ground over the circuit including the closed contacts trio-r, ZPU-i, and 3SDl to operate the marl; relay 3M and then the second marl; relay fiiviKS so that a mark pulse is recorded on the magnetic tape in the trunl; recorder Still, and the drive magnet 63d is operated to condition the magnetic tape for being advanced a single step. Upon release of the contacts 232, the marl; relays 3lvli-l and SMKS sequentially release to release the drive magnet 530 so that the magnetic tape is advanced a single step following the recording of the first mark pulse. Thereafter, the contacts 5132 close at sixty second intervals so that a marl; pulse is recorded in the trunl; recorder Still at the end of each one minute interval, thereby to provide a number oi marlt pulses on the magnetic tape corresponding to the number of one minute intervals that the toll connection was maintained.

The recording operations of the trunl; recorder are terminated in response to the release of the extended toll connection, and, incident to the release of the trunl; circuit, an cnd-ol-call code comprising simultaneous marl: and space pulses is recorded on the magnetic tape to indicate the end of the items of information pertaining to the toll call. The magnetic tape is then advanced a counted number of steps under the control of the pulse assist relay 291%, the end-ol-cull relay ZEC, and the stepping switch DC to provide a fixed or predetermined space separating the items of information pertaining to the toll call from the item of information to be recorded pertaining to a succeeding toll call. More specifically, when the calling substation A goes "on-hook," the calling bridge relay LCB is released to restore the contacts controlled thereby to their normal position, in which position the contacts A182 are opened to interrupt the opera ing circuit for thc SlOivdO-l'clCdSC release delay relay 2RD.

Alter a suitable time delay determined by the slow-torclease characteristic ot the release delay relay 2RD, this relay releases to restore the contacts controlled thereby to their normal position. The opening of the contacts IiRDl removes ground from the sleeve lead of the extended switch train to permit the switch train extended to the trunk circuit to restore o its normal condition. The closure of the contacts ZRD'l completes an operating circuit for the space relay 28? extending through the closed contacts IRDSZ and ZYCZ so that the space relay 2S? and the .3 :ond space relay are sequentially operated to energize the space puts: head 541) [or recording a space pulse on the magnetic tape immediately following the group of marl; pulses representing the duration of the toll call. The sequential operation of these relays further cnzrgizes the drive magnet 530 to condi- 255 tion the drive mechanism for advancing the magnetic tape a single step.

In opening the contacts ZRDZ in response to the release of the release delay relay 2RD, the source of main holding ground is removed from the trunk circuit so that the relays 2PT. ZLD, 35R, BSRS, and 259.1 release to restore their contacts to a normal condition. The release of these relays performs no useful function at this time other than in conditioning the trunl; circuit for a cycle of operation as described above. The opening of the contacts JRDZ, ZSRTZ, and ZSRSE terminates operation of the timer to prevent the recording or" additional duration information in the trunk recorder 500. In addition to removing the source of main holding mind from the trunk circuit, the opening of the contacts ZRDZ interrupts the operating circuit for the SlOW- to-relcase re ease delay slave relay 211 F. ibis relay. after a suitable time interval releases to close the contacts ZRDSI, 3RDSl, BRDSZ, and SRDSB and to open the contacts 2RDS2 and 3RDS4. The closure of the contacts ZRDSI prepares an operating circuit for the pulse assist relay 2lA and one pcrating .vinding ot' the dil fercntial end-of-call relay EEC, which path includes the closed contacts ZRDTl and ZPBI; and extends to the home position contacts in the bank of contacts associated with the wiper 2DC4 of the stepping switch l'JLJ. The opening of the contacts ZRDSZ interrupts the above described operating circuit for the space relay 281 so that this relay and the second space relay ItSlS release to deencrgize the drive magnet 530, thereby to advance the magnetic tape in the trunk recorder Still a single step following the recording of the space pulse dispose after the group of mark pulses representing the duration information. The closure of the contacts IiltDSZ re applies ground to the sleeve terminal of the trunl: cir cuit extending from either of the closed contacts IiltD'll or ZDCZ. The reapplication of ground to the sleeve lead at this time cannot hold the switch train extended to the trunk circuit inasmuch as the switch train h: released in the slowto-releasc interval of the release dcaiy slave relay ZRDS following the opening of the contacts SRDl described above. How the rcapplication of ground to the sleeve terminal of the trunk circuit at this time prevents the seizure of the trunk circuit for use in re cording items of information pertaining to a sub cquent toll call until such time as the trunk circuit has been fully restored to its normal condition, the cnd-ol-call code has been recorded in the trunk recorder 5G0, and the magnetic tape therein advanced to a position conditioned to receive these next items to be recorded. The closure of the contacts lll-tDSl again connects the re sister 351 and the condenser 352 across the repeat coil 320 to provide a termination for the trunk circuit.

The closure of the contacts 3RDS1B completes an or; crating circuit for the release or reset magnet ZrDCZ of the stepping switch DC which extends through the closed contacts SE01 and the closed oil-normal contacts 3DCl. In response to energization of the magnet SDCZ, the contacts lDCZZ are closed to provide a delayed alarm signal, as described above, and the plurality of wt; "-11; ZlDCi, ZDCZ, 2DC3, and 2DC4 are mechanically restored to their normal home position. in restoring the pipers to their normal position, the contacts SDCl and 'sDtjll are opened. The opening of the contacts SDCI'. removes one source of ground from the sleeve lead or? the trunk cir cuit, but ground is maintained thereon by the closed contacts SRDTI. The opening of the contacts 3DCI interrupts the above described operating circuit for the release magnet 3DCZ so that this relay releases to open the contacts tDCZl.

The restoration of the Wipers of the stepping switch DC to their normal position conditions this stepping switch for reuse in counting intermittent operations of the drive magnet 530 under the control of the pulse assist relay ZPA so that the magnetic tape is advanced 

